Clark Duncan reflects on Johnny Majors

Clark Duncan reflects on Johnny Majors.

PODCAST: In his own words, the life of Johnny Majors

KNOXVILLE — Former Tennessee head coach and player Johnny Majors died Wednesday.

He was 85.

South-Doyle High School head coach Clark Duncan played for Majors at Tennessee and was a member of his first recruiting class in 1977.

Duncan reflected on Majors in a story with the Knoxville News Sentinel, discussing a time that he had a previous conversation with his former head coach.

“I just felt like I owed it to him to tell him what he meant to me, and I had the opportunity to do that there,” said Duncan. “And now that he’s passed, it makes me feel really, really good that I had that conversation with him, just to share with him the things that I learned from him, the things he instilled in me, have helped me to be who I am today.

“I’m thankful for that.”

The entire story can be read here (subscription required).

Vols offer 2022 Georgia tight end, Tennessee legacy

Vols offer 2022 Georgia tight end, Tennessee legacy.

Tennessee has offered Bennett Christian, a tight end from Acworth, Georgia to be a part of the 2022 recruiting class.

Tight ends coach Joe Osovet has taken the lead on Christian, a 6-foot-5, 225-pound prospect at Allatoona High School. Georgia Tech, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan State, Ohio State and others have offered Christian, although his in-state Georgia Bulldogs have not.

Christian’s father, Bill Christian, is a former Tennessee player who played under the late Johnny Majors, who recently passed away at the age of 85. Tennessee does not yet have a player committed to the 2022 recruiting class.

Archie Manning reflects on Johnny Majors, Pat Dye

Archie Manning reflects on Johnny Majors, Pat Dye.

Archie Manning, former Ole Miss quarterback and College Football Hall of Fame inductee, released a statement regarding the passing of Johnny Majors and Pat Dye.

“We lost two legends this week with the passing of College Football Hall of Fame inductees Pat Dye and Johnny Majors,” Manning said in a National Football Foundation press release. “Both were fierce competitors, but they knew how to leave it all on the field. Off the field, they had a deep passion for impacting the countless young men who they coached. Their memories will live on in those young men.
“I feel blessed to have known them both personally, and I will miss them both, especially at the NFF Annual Awards Dinner each December.
“Our thoughts and prayers are with their families, friends and the schools where they coached and played.”
Majors served as Tennessee’s head coach from 1977-92 and played for the Vols from 1953-56. He won the Southeastern Conference championship in 1985, 1989 and 1990. The former Vol was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1987.
Dye was head coach at Auburn from 1981-91, winning the SEC championship in 1983, 1987, 1988 and 1989. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2005.

Phillip Fulmer: Johnny Majors ‘gave many of us coaches our start in big-time college football’

Phillip Fulmer: Johnny Majors ‘gave many of us coaches our start in big-time college football’

PODCAST: In his own words, the life of Johnny Majors

KNOXVILLE — Former Tennessee player and head coach Johnny Majors died Wednesday.

He was 85.

Tennessee Director of Athletics Phillip Fulmer served as an assistant under Majors from 1980-92.

Fulmer released a statement regarding Majors’ passing.

“It’s a sad day,” Fulmer said in a UT press release. “He gave many of us coaches our start in big-time college football. He mentored us, pushed us and allowed us to be part of the proud resurgence of Tennessee football.

“He touched and changed many lives for the good, and our thoughts are with his family, former players and great fans who are remembering him today.”

How Johnny Majors spent his last hours

How Johnny Majors spent his last hours.

PODCAST: In his own words, the life of Johnny Majors

KNOXVILLE — Former Tennessee player and head coach Johnny Majors died Wednesday.

He was 85.

Majors’ family released a statement of the Tennessee legend’s passing and how he spent his final hours. The statement was provided in a University of Tennessee press release.

John Terrill Majors passed away peacefully at his Knoxville home early this morning. He was 85 years old.

“It’s with a sad heart that we make this announcement,” said Mary Lynn Majors, his wife of 61 years. “John passed away this morning. He spent his last hours doing something he dearly loved: looking out over his cherished Tennessee River.”

Majors’ son, John Ireland Majors, recognizes that his father’s legacy extends well beyond the football field. “Dad’s passions and friendships were so diverse. He loved the symphony, travel, history and almost any type of museum.”  Mary Elizabeth Majors, his daughter, added, “my dad was a strong and determined person.  Our family will all try to live up to that legacy as we mourn his loss – and celebrate his life.”

A memorial service at St. John’s Cathedral will be held at a later date. In lieu of flowers, please consider contributions to the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra or the charity of your choice.

College Football Morning Announcements: June 4, 2020

Johnny Majors gets remembered and we talk Tennessee’s chances in the SEC in 2020 on this College Football Morning Announcement!

Good morning and happy Thursday to each and everyone of you college football fans out there.

I did things a little differently today on the College Football Morning Announcements as Dan Harralson of Vols Wire joined me to remember a college football legend, Johnny Majors, who died Wednesday at the age of 85.

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Majors was a two-time SEC player of the year at Tennessee before returning to coach his alma-mater immediately after leading Pitt to a national title in 1976.

Related: Check out Dan’s podcast with Johnny Majors remembering his life in football

Nick and Dan also discuss what keyed Tennessee’s turnaround from 1-4 and SEC laughing stock to 8-5 and winners of six in a row to close 2019.  How close is Tennessee to playing for another SEC Championship?

That gets discussed and some memories from the old Notre Dame/Tennessee series get brought up as the guys hope for that to one day be picked up again.

Subscribe to Nick Shepkowski’s CFB Morning Announcements on Apple Podcasts

 

PODCAST: In his own words, the life of Johnny Majors

In his own words, the life of Johnny Majors.

Remembering Johnny Majors — 1935 -2020

KNOXVILLE — Former Tennessee player and head coach Johnny Majors died Wednesday.

He was 85.

Majors was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1987. He was an All-American tailback for the Vols in 1956 and a two-time Southeastern Conference MVP in 1955-56.

The former Vol won the 1976 national championship as head coach at Pittsburgh before returning to Tennessee in the same capacity. Majors won the SEC championship as the Vols’ head coach in 1985, 1989 and 1990.

Before Majors’ passing, he joined the show “Tennessee Two-A-Days” to discuss his football career from his high school playing days until his retirement from coaching in 1996.

In a never released podcast, Majors discussed being recruited by General Robert Neyland and signing with the Vols, his time as head coach at Iowa State and his tough decision to leave a championship program at Pittsburgh to return to Tennessee and rebuild his alma mater.

The entire interview can be listened to here or below.

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Legendary College Football Player/Coach Johnny Majors Dies at 85

College football hall of fame player and national champion coach Johnny Majors has died at 85 years old. Learn more about Majors here.

College Football Hall of Famer Johnny Majors has died at the age of 85.  Majors was a legendary tailback at Tennessee before a coaching career that led him to Iowa State and Pitt before eventually ending up coaching at Tennessee.

Majors was a Tennessee football legend, twice winning the SEC Player of the Year Award and finishing second in the Heisman Trophy voting to Paul Hornung of Notre Dame in 1956.

After a brief stint in the Canadian Football League, Majors got into coaching as a graduate assistant at Tennessee before stops as an assistant at Mississippi State and Arkansas.

In 1968 he earned his first head coaching job at Iowa State where he went 24-30-1 in five seasons, earning bowl berths in his last two years there.

He took the Pitt job in 1973 and led them to three bowl games in four years, culminating in a national championship after a 12-0 season in 1976.

Majors then returned to Tennessee where he coached the Volunteers from 1977 to 1992, going 116-62-8 along the way and winning three SEC Championships as well as a pair of Sugar Bowl wins and a Cotton Bowl victory as well.  After being forced to step down in 1992, Majors

Majors returned to Pitt from 1993 through 1996 but failed to find the same success, going just 12-32 in his second stint with the Panthers.

In terms of a Notre Dame connection, Majors wasn’t just the first runner-up in Hornung’s Heisman season but also coached against the Irish nine different times, going 2-3 in his two stints with Pitt and 2-2 during his time at Tennessee.

Majors is said to have spent his final hours doing something he very much enjoyed, looking out over the Tennessee River.

For more information on Johnny Majors check out our friends at VolsWire who will have coverage throughout the coming days.

Tennessee football legend Johnny Majors dies

Tennessee football legend Johnny Majors dies.

KNOXVILLE — A legendary figure in the University of Tennessee’s storied history has passed away.

College Hall of Fame player and former Tennessee football head coach Johnny Majors died Wednesday.

He was 85.

Majors first came to UT as a player in 1953, where he played for the legendary Bowden Wyatt, a Tennessee alumnus who is in the College Football Hall of Fame as both a player and a coach. Majors also played for coach Harvey Robinson on Rocky Top.

Majors was a single-wing tailback for the Volunteers where he shined as both a runner and a passer. He also returned kicks and punted for the Vols.

He was an All-America standout in in 1956. That same season, he was the runner-up for the Heisman Trophy. Majors finished second to Notre Dame’s Paul Hornung, who played on a 2-8 team. The Vols went  10-1 and won the Southeastern Conference championship.

Majors, who was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1987, was a two-time SEC Player of the Year in 1955 and 1956.

Professionally, Majors played briefly for the Canadian Football League’s Montreal Alouettes.

Later that year, he returned to Rocky Top where he served as a graduate assistant coach under Wyatt.

Majors later coached the backfield at Tennessee between 1958-59.

He then served as a defensive backs coach at Mississippi State and as an assistant coach at Arkansas under the legendary Frank Broyles.

In 1968, he got his first head coaching job at Iowa State, where he guided the Cyclones for five seasons. In Ames, he had a record of 24-30-1.

In his two campaigns there, Majors guided the Cyclones to back-to-back bowl games, losing in the Sun Bowl. Iowa State went 8-4 that year. The following year, he went 5-6-1 and lost in the Liberty Bowl.

In 1973, Majors went to Pittsburgh. He coached the Panthers for four seasons. He led them to the national championship in 1976. That year, he coached the legendary Tony Dorsett, who won the Heisman Trophy. Pittsburgh went 12-0 that season.

Majors then took over as head coach at Tennessee, where he coached from 1977-92, winning three SEC titles in 1985, 1989 and 1990.

He was the SEC Coach of the Year in 1985.

At UT, Majors compiled a record of 116-62-8.

He was forced to resign in Knoxville in 1992.

He would return to Pittsburgh for his final four seasons of coaching, He went 12-32 upon returning, but later served as an athletic administrator for the Panthers.

Legendary Tennessee, Pitt coach Johnny Majors dead at 85

Johnny Majors, a Tennessee legend as a player and coach, has died at 85.

The college football world lost its second coaching legend in less than a week when former Tennessee coach Johnny Majors died Wednesday at the age of 85.

His death came days after Auburn’s Pat Dye succumbed to kidney disease at 80.


Al Messerschmidt/WireImage

A triple-threat tailback at the University of Tennessee, Majors was an All-American and runner-up for the Heisman Trophy to Paul Hornung in 1956.

After starting his head-coaching career at Iowa State, Majors moved to his alma mater for 16 seasons with a record of 116-62-8.

In 1973, he left to become coach at Pittsburgh and won a national championship in 1976 with a 12-0 record. He received national Coach-of-the-Year honors following that season.

In 1977, he returned to Knoxville as Tennessee’s head coach. Over a 15-year career, he led the Vols to three SEC championships (1985, ’89, ’90). He also won the Sugar Bowl in ’86 and ’91.

Among those NFL coaches who were assistants under Majors and grew from his coaching tree were: Jimmy Johnson, Jon Gruden, Al Saunders, and Dave Wannstedt.Joh